Koran-burning pastor joins Rand Paul, Ted Cruz in race for presidency

Terry Jones, a Florida pastor infamous for burning the Koran, is running for president as an independent candidate. His foreign policy platform focuses on Islam as the greatest threat to the United States’ national security.

In March 2011, Jones sparked outrage around the world when he
supervised
the burning of a Koran on the grounds of his tiny Florida
church, Dove World Outreach Center in Gainesville ‒ from which he
has since split. He repeated the controversial event in April
2012.

This week, the controversial pastor announced he would seek the
presidency, telling WWSB that his goal is to speak out and raise
awareness for those who are being oppressed.

"I believe most all the politicians are politicians. They're
not telling the American people the truth. I spent 30 years in
Europe as a missionary and when I came back to America I was
horrified by the conditions of America. Lets say the moral,
spiritual, and let's say the financial conditions," Jones
said.

He believes he can save the country from radical Islam, and
promises to reduce the deficit as well.

Jones blames the state of the US economy on President Barack
Obama. The pastor was once investigated by the Secret Service
after he lynched an
effigy of Obama outside of his church.

“I’m pretty devastated by the condition of America, the moral
condition, the spiritual condition, the economical [sic]
condition,” Jones told Politico, adding that he didn’t have
a “game plan” for his campaign and that winning would
require “some type of major miracle.”

Samir Khatib, the spokesperson for the Islamic Society of
Sarasota and Bradenton, told WWSB the idea of Jones running for
president is laughable.

"I think it's a joke. The American people need to have
somebody with more substance and intelligence and knowledge to be
a president," Khatib said. "I think it's a waste of
time, a waste of money and a waste of his effort."

Foreign policy with some of America’s closest allies could be
difficult if Jones were to win the election. He had his
anti-Islam signs seized and was denied
entry in Canada in October 2012. Germany had also prevented
Jones from entering the country for a screening of 'Innocence of
Muslims' the previous month. Then-British Home Secretary Theresa
May banned the pastor from ever stepping foot in the United
Kingdom in December 2010, after he had been invited to give a
speech there for a right-wing group, England is Ours.